We only did about 10min each, but it was more than enough to fall in love.
First Demon did an awesome display for us, and what impressed me most was how effective the ram-air system was in changing the aerofoil shape of the wing at higher speeds. You could actually see the shape change at different speeds


David tried it out first, and it was nice to see him play gently for a while, getting a feel for it.
I was a bit nervous taking it up, as Demon convinced me I was jinxed. About a year ago, for those of you who have forgotten, he left me with a short list of instructions, the keys to his trike and a full tank. I left his trike at Cross-Winds, after the entire electric system (which include the avionics), decided to quit on me. Battery dead, digital instrument flat.

When we arrived at Rietfontein this time around, we found Demon with some dodgy-looking wires running from his car to his aircraft battery in a rather dodgy way. He promptly told me that this is my fault



It was most entertaining to watch skygod and Demon swop batteries. A lot of tools went into it, a lot of cursing, and a lot of complaints about what "maturity" (yeah right - never those two), can do to your eye-sight.
Anyway, it was finally my turn to take KWK up for a flight. Amazing! For a long time I have maintained that trikes seem to sacrifice safety for speed, and that you end up with a number of designs which are too light in the pitch and heavy in the roll. Real dogs to fly in turbulence, as the bar keeps hitting you in the chest, and it almost feels as if the wing wants to tuck...
Not KWK, not by a long shot... everything I would like to see in a modern trike. It is light in the roll, firm in the pitch, and glides like an old 18m2 windlass. I even thermalled it, and it was amazing.
She floats incredibly well, with lots of round-out authority, and you have no loss of controll as she slows down...
Well done on a great buy Demon, even if the speed-range was not that amazing, it would still rate as one of the nicest (and most comfortable) trikes I have ever flown.
I hope to see a lot more of these in SA, its going to change the way we feel about triking.